Oprah Winfrey, Sandra Bullock, and Meryl Streep will star in a comedy written and directed by Sex and the City's Michael Patrick King. The plot: Three ladies sip cosmos and swap sex puns behind-the-scenes at a home-shopping network.

King says of the project, which has yet to be written, "To have access to these women, tell them this story and hear yes was almost like a Greek mythological journey, with me going from one goddess to the next. It was humbling." [Deadline]

At a hearing over whether or not he should lose his license, Dr. Michael Kamrava said of implanting Nadya Suleman with a dozen embryos, "I'm sorry for what happened. When I look back at it, I wish I had never done it and it will never happen again." [Radar]

Syfy has greenlit a web series called Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome about the adventures of young William Adama. [ONTD]

Playgirl wants to help objectify the men of Glee. "We would be very willing to pay for them both-up to 100 thousand. And it wouldn't have to be fully X-rated, either," says a rep. [E!]

Glee's Naya Rivera says, "In high school I was most like Artie and Rachel. I knew what I wanted, like Rachel, although I wasn't as obnoxious. But like Artie, I was a nerd, always trying to fit in and get my hair to lie flat." [Just Jared]

Jane Lynch tells More, "I shouldn't say this, but I'd never dated anyone that I wanted to marry. I didn't think it was going to be out there for me. But the minute we were married, I felt the difference: I felt like I am no longer alone." [ONTD]

Willow Smith on the concept behind "Whip My Hair": "Me and my mom first came up with Willowettes, and then we came up with Warriorettes... It takes a warrior to stand up for themselves and not let anybody tell them that what they're wearing or what they're saying or what they're doing is wrong." She adds, "'Whip My Hair' means don't be afraid to be yourself, and don't let anybody tell you that that's wrong. Because the best thing is you." [ONTD]